4.8 Article

Reconstruction of ancestral karyotype illuminates chromosome evolution in the genus Cucumis

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 107, Issue 4, Pages 1243-1259

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15381

Keywords

ancestral karyotype; chromosome rearrangement; centromere repositioning; descending dysploidy; oligo-FISH; Cucumis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFD1000804]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31430075]
  3. Jiangsu Agricultural Innovation of New Cultivars [PZCZ201719]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions

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A new method was developed to rapidly and accurately represent karyotypes of Cucumis species, revealing that African and Asian origin species underwent large-scale genomic reshuffling during evolution.
Karyotype dynamics driven by complex chromosome rearrangements constitute a fundamental issue in evolutionary genetics. The evolutionary events underlying karyotype diversity within plant genera, however, have rarely been reconstructed from a computed ancestral progenitor. Here, we developed a method to rapidly and accurately represent extant karyotypes with the genus, Cucumis, using highly customizable comparative oligo-painting (COP) allowing visualization of fine-scale genome structures of eight Cucumis species from both African-origin and Asian-origin clades. Based on COP data, an evolutionary framework containing a genus-level ancestral karyotype was reconstructed, allowing elucidation of the evolutionary events that account for the origin of these diverse genomes within Cucumis. Our results characterize the cryptic rearrangement hotspots on ancestral chromosomes, and demonstrate that the ancestral Cucumis karyotype (n = 12) evolved to extant Cucumis genomes by hybridizations and frequent lineage- and species-specific genome reshuffling. Relative to the African species, the Asian species, including melon (Cucumis melo, n = 12), Cucumis hystrix (n = 12) and cucumber (Cucumis sativus, n = 7), had highly shuffled genomes caused by large-scale inversions, centromere repositioning and chromothripsis-like rearrangement. The deduced reconstructed ancestral karyotype for the genus allowed us to propose evolutionary trajectories and specific events underlying the origin of these Cucumis species. Our findings highlight that the partitioned evolutionary plasticity of Cucumis karyotype is primarily located in the centromere-proximal regions marked by rearrangement hotspots, which can potentially serve as a reservoir for chromosome evolution due to their fragility.

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